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The impact of illness intrusiveness and overparenting on depressive symptoms in parents of youth with inflammatory bowel disease

Authors :
Clayton S Edwards
Noel J. Jacobs
Marissa N Baudino
John E. Grunow
John M. Chaney
Jeanne Tung
Caroline M Roberts
Kaitlyn L. Gamwell
Source :
Journal for specialists in pediatric nursing : JSPNREFERENCES. 27(1)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

PURPOSE Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) management creates significant caregiver demands that can interfere with parents' ability to engage in a number of role functions (i.e., illness intrusiveness) well into their child's adolescence, potentially resulting in excessive or misdirected parenting (i.e., overparenting). Disruptions and limited access to routine and valued activities (e.g., family, work, and leisure) due to IBD and excessive parenting may result in parents neglecting their own personal and emotional self-care needs, increasing their risk for depressive symptoms. To explore these associations, the present study examined parents' experience of illness intrusiveness and subsequent overparenting as serial mediators in the association between disease severity and parent depressive symptoms. DESIGN AND METHODS Participants were 146 caregivers of adolescents with IBD from an outpatient pediatric gastroenterology clinic. During a scheduled outpatient visit, parents completed measures of illness intrusiveness, overparenting, and depressive symptoms. Pediatric gastroenterologists provided ratings of disease severity. RESULTS Several direct and indirect associations were observed among the modeled variables. Notably, mediation analysis revealed a significant disease severity → illness intrusiveness → overparenting → depressive symptoms serial indirect effect. CONCLUSIONS Parents' experience of greater IBD-induced lifestyle disruptions is associated with increased overparenting and a heightened risk for depressive symptoms. PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS Parents should be encouraged to establish and maintain a healthy balance between parenting and self-care/role function activities, especially during adolescence when greater youth autonomy and independence are crucial. These types of clinical efforts may reduce the likelihood of parents experiencing depressive symptoms, and have the added benefit of improving adolescent IBD self-management.

Details

ISSN :
17446155
Volume :
27
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal for specialists in pediatric nursing : JSPNREFERENCES
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....62db70a8223487c7d88bb024fc879a7c